a eee amen" —_ Oe Dottans A YEAR, Tens Five yEW SERIES. ad tee etatetheneinn ene THE eee hen A lies ad DAILY — ee tect Seneca meieteatiententgmemans oon * This is true Liberty, when Free Born Men. having te advise the Public, may speak free.”—Evxirivzs. OHA RLOTTE ———— ad TOWN, P. E ISLAND, 1 Sccihdeiendemecnasballiinaal Cx daettiactite Ce ee EXAMINER. ~~ | eee enema SS IONDAY, JUNE 1, 1891. Srxete Corres Two Cenrs Sa LO VOL. 28.—NO. 9 eS yiGOR AND STRENGTH. oz FAILING MANHOOD, Genera! and ¥I2- ve aebiuie’, Weakzees ef Body and Mind, Riects of {a Old or Young. af cecusten i : estore’. Bow toenlarge an en Woe CBSANSs panty st BODT Atsclutely us- ; PREATMENT—Benefts ic a day. Mon toztify abiag Motes ond Ferviga Countrice. Write them. Bock vega tod rs ald (sealed) free. Addrons. ©., BUPFALO, WN. Y. f\ _— ; e tT] “i ie SMOREHOUND Al DAN J FOR pete LCOUGH W Roup: cil COUGHS HOOPING S-< =" OLDS. 7 a eh YEARS IN USE, ww PRICEZ5° PER BOTTLE c. ARMSTRONG & CO. PROPRIETORS St, John., N. B. WweTIGR SALES, 125 Barrels Wt rates, pt payments, Good references, Give) woe trial, CHARLES I. MORRISON, Auctioneer, meh i2 106 Queen Street. : ARE NOT a Pur- gative Medi- cine. They are a BLoop BUILDER, Tonic and Recon- STRUCTOR, as they Supply in a condensed form the substances ctually needed to en- rich the Blood, curing 1 diseases coming trom Poor and Wat eky BLoop, or from VirTiutep Homors in the Bioop, and also nvigorate and BUILD UP the Broop and SyetTem, when broken down by overwork, mental worry, disease, @xcesses and indisore- tions. They have a SPEciFIo ACTION On both men and women, restoring LOST VIGOR and correcting all IRREGULARITIES 60d SUPPRESSIONS. MAN Who finds his mental fac- ulties dull or failing, or flagging, should take these _ restore his lost energies, both tal. OMAN should take them. They cure all su pee pr po Tegularities, which inevitably When neglected, JOUNG MEN should ae these aaeam ey will cure t re- youthful bad habits, and strengthen the *ystemn, j {ONG WOMEN For aie b Bee: ¥ all druggists, or will be sent u Pt of pries (50c. per bex), by aa’ DR. WILLIAMS’ MED. co. Brockville, Ont, ie Poyseal should take them. These Pints will MONTREAL. A Stertat 4 Facalt red : Stating the details of the ‘als, Laboratories, Wa: 0 her im prove enta in i eats of Civil, Mining Met tr, whiny eigiteering aud P a Wil afbird in the - ANageS not 7 hia country . ? ‘ ’ L Ww Ving the D Malds “clence : d. . can BRAKENRIDGE, B. C. L., > Acting Secretary, Course for Women), and tee NNOUNCEMENT of the y of Applied Science has been pew kshops, Apparatus Minn several Depart- » “ining, Mechanical and Klec- ractical Chemistry, : Session of 1891-2 hitherto accessible to Students geese Sener the Boot & Shoe Factory ———— a THE PLACE | | } ——TO GET LEADING STYLES OF—— Durable, Comfortable and Cheap Boots and Shoes, —— mee X )— Charlottetown, May 22, 1°91—2aw & wky ee stay ——— SN a eh el sacle te, ct one ODDFELLOWS COLUMN. Lodges in P. E Island. CHARLOTTETOWN : St. Lawrence Lodge, meets Monday. Wildey Lodge, meets Friday. Port la Joie Encampment, meets second Wednesday. SUMMERSIDE : Prince Edward Lodge, meets Thursday. OUR WATCHWORDS. FRIENDSHIP. | My friead, you do not, cannot know how much Oa you my sad heart leans in darkest hours, Your counsel cheers my soul amid the gloom } Of disappointed hopes. To you I fly Whén o’er me clouds are thick, and black despair Enswathes my epirit, till it almost longs To break the bonds that bind it to the earth, And rest within that perfect home beyond the tomb, Your voice revives me and your presenge calms, W hen griefs, and cares, and friends most false| annoy, I do mat tear that you will fail me, when Adversity shall come, if God so will, ARE YOU AWARE ‘| HAT WE ARE SELLING READYMADE CLOTHING OF OUR OWN MANUFACTUR# cheaper and better value than you can get Imported Clothing? IT’S A FACT. As for Clothing made to order we are to the front, and have more than a local reputation. A big range of WATERPROOF COATS and everyhing in GENTS’ FURNISHINGS. You are saving money when you buy of D. A. BRUCE. } Charlottetown, May 22, 1891—dy & wky use Flour & Corn —_——(x_ -__—— Sew meal ~-—--—HNAVE JUST RECEIVED—~——— ; are prepared to conduct Auction— P Biles of Furniture, Land, Stocks, all of *.inany part of the City or Island at, Foc 600 Barrels Choice Family Flour, ————AN D—-——-— Kiln Dried Cornmeal which was bought low and will be sold at the lowest k-bottom prices for Cash. Every barrel guaranteed full weight, and delivered to any part of the city free of charge. BEER & GOFF, Queen and King Square Stores. 9 mayl9—eod & wky LE EEe eee ad Requisites Before the Wedding! NGAGEMENT RINGS, very handsome. We will engrave any motto or initial inside Rings free of charge. Presents for Birthdays or special occasions. — — [1 a, T ° Requisites at the Wedding! WEDDING RINGS.—We have a full assortment. A Lady’s or Gent's Watch, elegant Brooches or Rings for the bridesmaids, Cake and Fruit Baskets, Flower Stands, Fruit Knives and Spoons, a fine display of all kinds of Silver Goods Tei aiid Requisites After the Wedding! Butter Dishes, Spoons and Tete-a-Tete A nice Tea or Coffee Set, ! Forks, good time-keeping Clocks, Card Receivers, Sets, Napkin Rings, etc. wm w. TAYW LOR, ©SMERON BLOCK. ~— sw - = Charlottetown, May 16, 1891. HATS! HATS! MeGCHLL UNIVERSITY, i | 1 on application to the | » supply detailed ; ec ~VFaculties of the | » Medicine, Arts (in- | + TWO CASES Englis Handsome St:yles at Low Prices. i tea eden “ob Price We guarantee the correct &ityles and the Lowest possible, from the $1.00 Hat up. JOHN McLEOD & CO. Chariottetown, March 21, 1891. ’ Wasaoarce more bright. Buy cioser, truer, tenderer will you be, Unselfish to the last. Deep gratitude From me is all you wish. Divine reward, in fullest measure, waits you in that land, Where faithtul friends shall soon be joined “again. LOVE. When danger threatened, when the dart of death Was raised aloft to strike ms to the heart ; When friends were false, and left me, lone, to die, Why did you stand so firm and faiter not, While, with your face illumined, all aglow With holy light from the Divine abode, You bade detiance to the dreaded king ? Why did you hold yourself as naught, for me, And clear-eyed, cheerful seem, as it you strove To give your life for mine? Oa, why did you, et .I was wronged, and human vipers tried oruin my good name, stand true as stcel And never doubt ? Effulgence from God's face In yours I saw, Transfiguration’s glory We know that God is love. We cannot fathom it, but life, and pain, And death are light as air, when weighed i truth ‘Ty heaven or earth, that mortal men stould BEER & GOFF hi Stiff Hats with it, That man is most like God who can love most. TEUTH, lt is the truth that makes us wise, in thought, In act, and guides our erring feet aright, As mid the tangled web of life we tread. Qar Order :eaches truth, that all may walk In wisdom’s ways. The most important lear. iat grand one, the brotherhood of miu. | IN THE OCrmetery.—How beautiful is Oddfellowship in the cemetery. It gathers about the open grave with a tenderness and sympathy that makes the world brighter and human nature lovelier, With ,the gentleness of love, it lowers into the | tomb the precious dust that it pledged the sacred honor of honorable manhood to sus- tain amidst the storms and dangers of life ; it speaks eloquently of the virtues of the dead which were revealed to it in intimate association ; it throws the sprigs of ever- green upou the casket as an eloquent ex- pression of the thought ‘the is not dead but sleepeth,” and then it turns to the widow aad paints the cloud that shrouds ‘her soul with the silvery lining of sym- | pathy, and folding the orphan in its arms, | presses it to its great, loving, sympathizing heart, and bids it rest im quiet and in safety. Inthe centuries past, when the few arrogated to themselves the privilege of living, and the mauy crawled in serfdom or struggled through life wondering at every moment why they were born only to ba despised by those who seemed to be no better than themselves, what asun-burst on the night Oddfellowship would have been. Yet it is as beautiful ro-day as it would have ‘heen twenty centuries ago; and while it is true that the world as a whole has th some degree lJearned the lessons of humanity, ‘and manhood is more fraternal, it is also true that many a heart would strive for love, aud that many a4 life would bea shadow and end in gloom, but for this mag- nificent organized benevolence. The wor d is hungry for such exhibitions of humanity ' as Oddfellowship is, and will be long after we bave laid down with the great army of humanitarians who have ‘‘ fallen asleep ” with the three glittering links upon their ‘souls.—Chicago Oddfellow. | In 1830, eleven years after its establish- -ment, the Order contained about 1,000 ywembers. In that year the building just vacated at Baltimore, was erected by the Order, and it gave a great impetus to the organization, and private houses had to be utilized for tho initiation of candidates. ‘The membership of the Order increased ‘gradually and surely. There was in mem- ‘bership in 1840, 11,166; 1850, 139,242: ‘1860, 149,239; 1870, 298,637; 1880, 440,- 783; 1889 (latest complete report) 634,335 At present writing, the American Ofer contaius fully 680,000 members. For a few dollars of temporary rel ef granted by the first lodge has developed the grand system through which is dispensed $2,656, 529.12 a year to unfortunate mem- bers. And from the few cents collected on the Warden’s axe has grown the magnifi- cent annual income of $6 854,611.43, Fron. the one little lodge of five iu the city of Baltimore bas grown the Order which now i has its lodges in every state and territory f | } ‘of the Union and in Canada, Sandwich Is- lands, Australasia, German Empire, Swit- gerland, Chili, Peru, Holland, West Indies, Mexico, Cuba, Sweden, France and Japan. n—sioieenanssitiiiaaiiagesciies Wx have just opened our case of new French kid gloves, a very superior make~— higbly recommended, and we are authorized by the maker to guarantee every pair. This giove is well worth $1.50 a pair, but our prices will be $1.35. We have a large stock Written Fur The Examiner. In Memoriam. 1. ' | Does Natuve shed tears? The drops are fast failing. What deepest of sorrows can touch her great heart’? ‘Ker, methought, in her kingdom were sweet | ; : } the crimes which government is ins‘ituted voices calling. The portals, sometime, shall be thrown apart, The songster still trills forth his lay of praise- treasure; The ivy-wreath’s tendrils are shooting anew. We know not the fulness of springtime by measure; We see, and we feel, and are stronger to do. No clime but has storm-clou1; no joy without sorrows; Eachjyear has its wiaters of darkness ard gloom; Each lifetime of hope has its shaded to-mor- rows, Each fairest of mortals tomb. finds rest in the Round pillars of night-time the shapes that are clingin, Evanish when dawn; So the strains of the angel-breathed anthem are ringing, To lessen our sorrow for one that has gone. Il. Tis the calm ef an evening's reaks the joy-g'eam of the Let her lie! sleep; Let the light o’er her brow sweetly fall, While the silent rays home through the gold portals creep, And the soul-voices quietly call, They tell of a land that is fairer than this With the flower, and the sunshine and love, Where our star-gleams of hope bloom to ful- ness of bliss, And they point, through the cloud-bank, above, And they «peak of a music that floats on their preath, As the angel-forms move to its strain; But the way to that land is the ‘‘Valley of Death,” And our hearts throb with newness of pain. But there sounds from the sweet Revelation of God The Amen to His promises giver. And we rise from our sorrow o'er newly laid grave-sod With heart-treasure garnered in heaven. May 18, 1891. eae Literary Notes. An important seiies of aticles on the Cily of London, by Walter Besant, will be begun in the June number of Harper’s Magazine. The first paper will be an entertaining and scholarly account of the fall of Augusta, or ‘* London —After the Romans.” ‘The opening chapters of a serial story by George du Maurier, entitled ‘‘Peter [bbetson, ” will appear in Harper's Magazine. The story, which is written in the form of an autobio- graphy, is one of peculiar psychological in- terest, involving meny strange incidents connected with the phenomena of dreams. It will be illustrated by the author in his own inimitable style, and being his first novel will attract very general attention from the begianing. George William Curtis? in the ‘‘ Eaitor’s Easy Chair” in Harper’s Magazine for June, exposes the folly of a recent proposal in the New York Legislature to ap; ropriate annually a large sum of money for the erection of statues to prominent Americans. He concludes by jsaying: ‘The erection of statues and monuments is better left to the action of citizens as individuals than as the State. As the bill was offered in the Legislature, the announcement was made that the private subscription for a statue of General Sherman was closed. Within four or five weeks after his death, it amounted almost to the sum which the bill proposed for a general erection of statues. It was an instinctive offering of adiniration, affection, and gratitude to a citizen of invaluable public ser vice and spotless character, who is sincerely honered, aud who may be most justly commended to the respect of the future America. When Americans are so truly prominent as Sherman, the gratitude of their countrymen will voluntarily build their monument, and without that instinctive action should such monuments be built ?” ———— > oO SrasonaBLe —Is your back yard clean- ed? Jf not, have it done right away; the Sanitary Officer is on the rounds, New Raita.—Pictou News : The steam- er Princeas of Wales took two carloads of new steel rails for the P. E. 1. R. as part of her cargo yesterday's trip. sioniligigetlailh Many prominent men are now being carried off by the ravages of la grippe. When we consider that by using Campbell's Quinine Wine asa preventative we can ward off the attacks of la grippe, we would advise you te purchase a bottle from your druggist. tf oul Goyxe TO THE AsyLuM —The Moncton Times says : Ou Monday last five sons of Xavier Nadeau, Biker's Brook, Kesti- gouche, were placed in the lunatic asylum. Mr. Nadeau has four other sons, none of whom here yet shown sigus of insanity. onaduiiiasiaas Fast Time. -- The Kentvillsy, N. 5., Chronicle says : It is expected that when the fast express gets runniag from Anna- polis to Halifax, passengers from St, Jubn via Annapolis can reach Halifax two hours earlier than by the latercolonia! Jine. hick icoesosibcielbe iin For Ovex Firry Years Mrs, Winsloe’s Soothing Syrup has beeu use d by millions of mothers for their children while cutting teeth. It relieves the little sufferer at once ; it pro duces natural, quiet sleep by relieving the child from pain, and the little cherub awekes as “‘ bright axa button.” Itis very pleasant to taste. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, relieves wind, regulater the bowels, and is the Lest-known remedy for diarrhea, whether arising from teetbing or other causes. Twenty-five cents a bottle Be sure and ask for ‘‘ Mrs. Winsloe’s Soothing of other makes at 69c., 75c., $1.10, and $1.20 a pair.—Perkins & Sterns. m2! 4i eod Syrup,” and take no other kind. mar2 3i eod & wky lyr by the license laws. Contributed by the W.C.7.U. of Charlottetown. Opinions of Great Men. What ought not to be used as a bey ought not to be sold as such; what the good of the community requires us to ex- pel, no man has a moral right to supply. Now, if it bs true that a vast proportion of to prevent and repress, have their origin in the use of ardent spirits; if our poorhouses, workhouses, jsils and penitentiaries are tenanted in a great degree by those whose first and chief impulse to crime came from the distillery and the dram-snops; if murder and theft, the most fearful outrages on property and life are most frequently the issue and consummation of intemperance, is not government bound to restrain by legia- lation the vending of the stimulus to these terrible social evils /—William Ellery Chan- ning. lt is mere mockery to ask us to put down drunkenness by moral and religious means when the Legislature facilitates the multi- plication of incitements to intem on every side. You might as well call upon the captain of a sinking ship and assy: ‘*Why don't you pump the water out /"’ when you are scuttling the ship in every direction. If you will cut off the supply of temptation I will ba bound by the help of God to convert drunkards ; but until you have taken off this perpetual supply of intoxicating drinks, we never can cultivate the fields. You have subinerged them, and if ever we reclaim our position, you im. mediately begin to build upon it a gin palace or some temptation to drink. t the Legislature do, its part and we will answer for the rest.—Cardinal Manning. The public traffic in liquors sustains the relation of an effictent cause to drunken- ness and all its direful concommitants. The dram-shop is the chief counteracting force of all the temperance efforts. It both creates the evil demand and furnishes the vile supply by inviting and fostering the drinking usages of society. We charge the entire business with being bad in itself. On this proposition the great battle of tem- perance reform is yet to befought. It either is a legitimate, useful and honorable branch of business, orit is not. Either the evils associated with it are incidental, and therefore to be guarded against as such, or they are necessary to and inseparable from the business, as effect follows cause, and only to be prevented by suppressing the trade itself. We believe the letter to be true.—-Rev. John Russel. The necessity of some law to prevent the evils of intemperance is universally admitted. There have been Jaws in England, intended for this purpose for centuries, and we have always had such laws in this countiy. The law should allew the sale for purpcses just co extensive with the proper use and for no other. When moderate drinking was thought to be the proper rule of use, moderate and careful selling was thought te be secured by And when the rule of duty in regard to the use of liquor was fixed at entire abstinence, except for medicinal and mechanical purposes, the proper rule of law in regard to the sale of liquors became, by a logical necessity, that of entire robibitivn, except for such purposes,—Hon. Wootberry Davis, Judge of the Supreme Court of Maine. ie ed aed SORA ARMOIRE OE | JG" bE SOS IG ’ Coes f PEGeD PE 38 af43 oe SP ‘ 7 CAPA CURE in its First Stages. Palatable as Milk. PE SRR ROR ROR ORF Oe ORR OER Oe OORT OORT ee ee eee ee ee Be sure you yet the genvine in Salmon colur wrapper; sold by ail Drug yia s, at 5ox. and $1.00, SCOTT & BOWNE, Bellcville. . s eerste ere orem POPE RFE ORR Ee —~— YSPEP es ee Fy FICURE THOUSANDS Of bottles of Dysrerticure have been sold during the pest few rears without 7“ adver. tising whatever. It easily overcomes Indiges. tion, and PostTIVeLY CURES the worst cases of Chronic Dyspepsia; this quality of curing the disease explains its large and epresding sale without having been brought prominently before the public. THE PAMPHLET ou DysPrpticure gives the results of many study on Diet and the Diseases of Digestion. interested in these subjects, Chronic Dyspenties especially, should read this little book; it ts wrapped about each bottle of the remedy, or will be promptic mailed free to any ress. DYSPEPTICURE Is sold by all Druggists—Sample Size 3G cts., Large Bottles $1.00, Those who cannot it easily will recelve a large bottle by mail, all expenses prepaid, on sending $1.00 by register- ed letter or P.O. Order to the maker, K. Short, Pharmacist, St. John, N. B. P. S.—Dysverticvrn is being daily sent with safety w the remotest parts of Canada aud the United States in a special mailing package. AR ONTARIO BRAN landing to-day, d will be sold low. wong AULD BROS. mayl5 —eod